UNAMA 4253 R3 Sept 07 [Converted]

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

UNAMA 4253 R3 Sept 07 [Converted] C A m 64 u 66 68 70 72 Mur 74 H ° D ° ° ° a-ye ° gho ° ar y b ya UZBEKISTANUZBEKISTAN r INA a Jawsjan Provincial Baghlan Provincial D UNAMA Office Office TAJIKISTAN Northern Badakshan Current and Planned Region Office Mary NorthNorth EastEast Provincial Office Region Office UN Offices Sari Pul Provincial iiz Region Office M Kiroya m Kerki Office rrm DustiDusti Khorugh u e BADAKHSHAN r T g Region a Rostaq HQ or Regionalb Office Takhar Provincial Office Fayzabad ir Qala-I-Panjeh Andkhvoy Jeyretan Office am JAWZJAN Mazari KUNDUZ P Provincial Sharif Kholm Jorm Provincial Office NorthernFaryab Provincial Region Kunduz Taluqan h Office SubOffice Office Eshkashem s Sheberghan BALKH Khanabad TAKHAR u T Undere construction K Future d Dowlatabad Baghlan Farkhar z orh Planned Shulgarah UNAMA HQ, e 36 n Sari Pul Dowshi ° Maymana Samangan Pul-i-Khumri u Central Region d Office Gilgit Badghis Provincial Provincial Tokzar SAMANGAN BAGHLAN n WesternWestern FARYAB i Khavak ISLAMIC Region Office Office Office Office QeysarQeysar AFGHANISTAN Central r H PANJSHER a SARI PUL Highland Office n Gushgy u Jammu GhorGhor Provincial Mahmud NURISTAN K Towraghondi BADGHIS OfficeOffice Raqi tan uris Taybad Charikar N KUNAR Qala-I-Naw Mo N and rghab BAMYAN PARWAN KAPISA A Asadabad M Mehtarlam GHOR Bamyan H Herat Chaghcharan G Kashmir H Karokh A ar Owbeh Dowlat Yar Meydan Kabul Kunar Provincial irud L Jalalabad Shahr KABUL Office 34 WARDAK °R E P U B L I C NANGARHAR 34 LOGAR ° HERATHIRAT AFGHANISTAN Ghazni Provincial Nili Office Puli Alam Peywar Pass Peshawar Islamabad Gardez Eastern DayDay Kundi Kundi DAY KUNDI Ghazni Region Office Provincial Provincial Office Office KHOST Rawalpindi - Uruzgan Provincial PAKTYA Shindand Office GHAZNI Qarah Bagh Khost Khost Provincial FarahAnar Provincial Darreh Khas Uruzgan Sharan Office Office b a URUZGAN d Southern n FARAH a ut Region Office gh ar Ar SouthSouth East East H Farah TirinTirin KotKot Region Office Office O F h ra ZABUL h 32 a Kajaki a ° F ur 32 m k L Tank PAKISTAN ° ra Qalat a -e Dela rn d PAKTIKA Ta w Nimroz Provincial Provincial Ro Office Office h Lashkar Gah IRAN as National capital Kh Kandahar s Panjwayi Zabul Zhob u Provincial capital Kadesh Provincial Office d Zabol Lashkar Gah n Provincial Office* I Town, village The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or Zaranj INDIA Spin Buldak ✈ Airports * On hold for security Chaman acceptance by the United Nations. NIMROZ reasons Kandahar Dotted line represents approximately the Line of Control International boundary Provincial Office in Jammu and Kashmir agreed upon by India and Pakistan. The final status of Jammu and Kashmir has not yet been Provincial boundary H Chehar elmand Deh Shu agreed upon by the parties. 30 Main road ° Borjak KANDAHAR Quetta 30 HELMAND 0 50 100 150 200 250 km Secondary road ° Zahedan Gowd-e Railroad Zereh 0 50 100 150 mi 62° 64° 66° 68° 70° 72° 74° Map No. 4374 UNITED NATIONS Department of Field Support October 2009 Cartographic Section.
Recommended publications
  • ASSESMENT REPORT of NEW IDPS in Jawzjan
    ASSESMENT REPORT OF NEW IDPS IN Jawzjan INTRODUCTION This Report present the findings and observation from joint assessment of IDPs which has been conducted by ZOA together with ACTED and governmental department RRD, ANDMA, DoRR, Governor office and provincial council on October, 2017 in Jawzjan province, Afghanistan. The armed conflicts have increased in several districts of Faryab, Sar-e-Pul, and Jawzjan, thus creating new conflict IDPs in many areas. The number of conflict IDPs increased in 2017. During one month, October 2017 the 1314 families newly displaced from Faryab, Sar-e-Pul and from different districts of Jawzjan province in the villages around the Sheberghan city. Meanwhile the number IDPs are increasing day by day. Considering the increased number of IDPs, Governmental officials organized a meeting in Governor Office. NGOs and relevant governmental departments were invited in this meeting. Based on a decision in this meeting, a team of survey have been formed in order to find the number of new IDPs in Jawzjan province. The team was consist of 9 people from different governmental and non-governmental organizations. In addition to this assessment, DoRR department collected letters from IDPs’ families for assistance so, this report present the final number of IDPs specified and finalized by DoRR department. The aim of this assessment was to collect information about living condition of IDPs’ families who left their houses and all assets in their origin due to armed conflicts and displaced around the Centre of Jawjan province. METHODOLOGY Department of Returnees and Repatriation (DoRR) was leading the joint assessment. A team of 9 people including ZOA, ACTED, ANDMA, Police Department, provincial council and Governor Office representative, were assigned for this survey.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 USIP –ADST Afghan Experience Project Interviwe #1 Executive
    USIP –ADST Afghan Experience Project Interviwe #1 Executive Summary The interviewee is a Farsi speaker and retired FSO who has had prior Afghan experience, including working with refugees during the period the Taliban was fighting to take over the country in 1995. He returned to Kabul in 2002 as chief of the political section, although retired, for seven months. He returned in 2003 and worked at the U.S. civil affairs mission in Herat for 6 months. He came back later in 2003 to Afghanistan working for the Asia Foundation. He worked on a PRT for approximately three months in late 2004 in Herat. The American presence was minimal when he got there. Security was excellent and the local warlord, Ismael Khan, was using revenues he siphoned from customs houses into development projects. Shortly after subject arrived in Herat, Khan was ousted in a brief battle by forces loyal to Kabul and with the threat of unrest U.S. forces were increased in the area. Our subject suggested to Khan that he make peace with the Kabul government, and he did, perhaps in part on the advice of subject. The Herat PRT had about one hundred American uniformed troops with three civilians, State, AID, Agriculture. Subject was the political advisor to the civil affairs staff, a reserve unit from Minnesota. But much of their work was soon taken over or undercut by the U.S. military task force commander brought in in response to the ouster of Khan. According to subject, the task force commander in the region saw himself as the political expert.
    [Show full text]
  • Afghan Fiber Optic Ring
    Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, Ministry of Communications and Information Technology (MCIT) Presentation by MCIT on Afghan Fiber Optic Ring International Conference, “Practical steps towards a knowledge-based economy” and the Seventh session of the SPECA Project Working Group on Knowledge-based Development Dushanbe,Tajikistan, 16-17 June 2015 CONTENTS: OFC CONNECTIVITY OF AFGHANISTAN; SYSTEMS/EQUIPMENT INSTALLED FOR OFC RING BACKBONE NETWORKS OF AFGHANISTAN; OFC NETWORK BANDWIDTH ALLOCATION; ROAD STATUS BETWEEN AFGHANISTAN AND CHINA THROUGH WAKHAN BORDER; ISSUES AND CHALLENGES OFC CONNECTIVITY OF AFGHANISTAN Under OFC Backbone Ring Project of Afghanistan [as funded by the Government under Core Development Budget of Afghanistan], 21 Provincial capitals have been connected and made operational for Broadband connectivity. These Provincial Capital cities/Provinces are as under: Kabul; Jalalabad ; Laghman; Logar; Paktia; Khost ; Paktika; Ghazni; Maidan Wardak; Qalat; Kandahar ; Lashkargah; Heraat ; Maimana ; Sheberghan; Mazaar-e-sharief ; Aibak; Pulekhumri; Kundoz , Parwan and Takhar . Another 04 Provinces will be connected with the Backbone Network in 2015-16, under the World Bank fund: Bamiyan, Badakshan; Kapisa and Kunar; Afghanistan needs (USD 40 Million )funds to connect the remaining 09 Provinces: Farah; Panjsheer; Sarepul; Qalaienow; Zaranj; Daikundi; Chagcharan; Tarinkot and Nuristan. OFC INTERNATIONAL CONNECTIVITY OF AFGHANISTAN. International connectivity has been established with Pakistan at two points – Turkham and Spin Boldak; with Tajikistan at Sherkhan Bandar; with Uzbekistan at Hayratan; with Turkmenistan at Aqina and Turghundi and with Iran at Islam Qala. Due to Security Issues, Ring is not complete due to a Gap in Connectivity between Heraat and Maimana ; Once this Gap is covered, the Backbone will have better Reliability and Redundancy in routing of Traffic.
    [Show full text]
  • Maah/Mrrd/Fao/Wfp National Crop Output Assessment
    FAO FAAHM/AFGHANISTAN OSRO/AFG/111/USA MAAH/MRRD/FAO/WFP NATIONAL CROP OUTPUT ASSESSMENT 10th May to 5th June 2003 Farmer met in Badghis while weeding his rain-fed wheat field, 23 May 2003. Raphy Favre, FAO/FAIT Agronomist Consultant, Mission TL Anthony Fitzherbert, FAO Consultant Javier Escobedo, FAO Emergency Agronomist Consultant 25th July 2003 Kabul TABLE OF CONTENT I. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY II. INTRODUCTION III. METHODOLOGY 1. Estimation of Yield 1.1 Field Measurements for Yield Estimates 1.2 Crop Development Stage at the Time of the Assessment 1.3 Interviews with Farmers in the Field 1.4 Selection of Districts and Transects 1.5 Selection of Fields 2. Estimation of Land planted 3. Market Prices IV. RESULTS 4. Estimated Planted Area 4.1 Irrigated Land 4.2 Rain-fed Land 5. Estimated Wheat Yield 5.1 Irrigated Land 5.2 Rain-fed Land 6. Estimated Wheat Production 6.1 Irrigated Land 6.2 Rain-fed Land 6.3 Total Production 6.4 Agricultural Constraints in 2003 7. Estimated Barley Production at Regional Level 8. Wheat Grain Prices V. CONCLUSION & RECOMMENDATIONS ANNEXES ANNEX I - Changes of the Itinerary and Teams Composition due to Security Situation in Southern Afghanistan ANNEX II - Participants ANNEX III - Mission Itinerary and Districts covered by the Survey 2 TABLES Table 1: Estimated irrigated cultivated land in 2003; Total irrigated land cultivated In 2003, irrigated Wheat cultivated and irrigated Barley cultivated in 2003. Table 2: Estimated rain-fed cultivated land in 2003; Total rain-fed land cultivated in 2003, rain-fed Wheat cultivated and rain-fed Barley cultivated in 2003.
    [Show full text]
  • IT in Afghanistan
    ICT in Afghanistan (two-way communication only) Siri Birgitte Uldal Muhammad Aimal Marjan 4. February 2004 Title NST report ICT in Afghanistan (Two way communication only) ISBN Number of pages Date Authors Siri Birgitte Uldal, NST Muhammad Aimal Marjan, Ministry of Communcation / Afghan Computer Science Association Summary Two years after Taliban left Kabul, there is about 172 000 telephones in Afghanistan in a country of assumed 25 mill inhabitants. The MoC has set up a three tier model for phone coverage, where the finishing of tier one and the start of tier two are under implementation. Today Kabul, Herat, Mazar-i-Sharif, Kandahar, Jalalabad, Kunduz has some access to phones, but not enough to supply the demand. Today there are concrete plans for extension to Khost, Pulekhomri, Sheberghan, Ghazni, Faizabad, Lashkergha, Taloqan, Parwan and Baglas. Beside the MoCs terrestrial network, two GSM vendors (AWCC and Roshan) have license to operate. The GoA has a radio network that reaches out to all provinces. 10 ISPs are registered. The .af domain was revitalized about a year ago, now 138 domains are registered under .af. Public Internet cafes exists in Kabul (est. 50), Mazar-i-Sharif (est. 10), Kandahar (est. 10) and Herat (est. 10), but NGOs has set up VSATs also in other cities. The MoC has plans for a fiber ring, but while the fiber ring may take some time, VSAT technology are utilized. Kabul University is likely offering the best higher education in the country. Here bachelor degrees in Computer Science are offered. Cisco has established a training centre in the same building offering a two year education in networking.
    [Show full text]
  • Badghis Province
    AFGHANISTAN Badghis Province District Atlas April 2014 Disclaimers: The designations employed and the presentation of material on this map do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Secretariat of the United Nations concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. http://afg.humanitarianresponse.info [email protected] AFGHANISTAN: Badghis Province Reference Map 63°0'0"E 63°30'0"E 64°0'0"E 64°30'0"E 65°0'0"E Legend ^! Capital Shirintagab !! Provincial Center District ! District Center Khwajasabzposh Administrative Boundaries TURKMENISTAN ! International Khwajasabzposh Province Takhta Almar District 36°0'0"N 36°0'0"N Bazar District Distirict Maymana Transportation p !! ! Primary Road Pashtunkot Secondary Road ! Ghormach Almar o Airport District p Airfield River/Stream ! Ghormach Qaysar River/Lake ! Qaysar District Pashtunkot District ! Balamurghab Garziwan District Bala 35°30'0"N 35°30'0"N Murghab District Kohestan ! Fa r y ab Kohestan Date Printed: 30 March 2014 08:40 AM Province District Data Source(s): AGCHO, CSO, AIMS, MISTI Schools - Ministry of Education ° Health Facilities - Ministry of Health Muqur Charsadra Badghis District District Projection/Datum: Geographic/WGS-84 Province Abkamari 0 20 40Kms ! ! ! Jawand Muqur Disclaimers: Ab Kamari Jawand The designations employed and the presentation of material !! District p 35°0'0"N 35°0'0"N Qala-e-Naw District on this map do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Secretariat of the United Nations concerning the legal status of any country, territory, Qala-i-Naw Qadis city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation District District of its frontiers or boundaries.
    [Show full text]
  • AFGHANISTAN MAP Central Region
    Chal #S Aliabad #S BALKH Char Kent Hazrat- e Sultan #S AFGHANISTAN MAP #S Qazi Boi Qala #S Ishkamesh #S Baba Ewaz #S Central Region #S Aibak Sar -e Pul Islam Qala Y# Bur ka #S #S #S Y# Keshendeh ( Aq Kopruk) Baghlan-e Jadeed #S Bashi Qala Du Abi #S Darzab #S #S Dehi Pul-e Khumri Afghan Kot # #S Dahana- e Ghori #S HIC/ProMIS Y#S Tukzar #S wana Khana #S #S SAMANGAN Maimana Pasni BAGHLAN Sar chakan #S #S FARYAB Banu Doshi Khinjan #S LEGEND SARI PUL Ruy-e Du Ab Northern R#S egion#S Tarkhoj #S #S Zenya BOUNDARIES Qala Bazare Tala #S #S #S International Kiraman Du Ab Mikh Zar in Rokha #S #S Province #S Paja Saighan #S #S Ezat Khel Sufla Haji Khel District Eshqabad #S #S Qaq Shal #S Siyagerd #S UN Regions Bagram Nijrab Saqa #S Y# Y# Mahmud-e Raqi Bamyan #S #S #S Shibar Alasai Tagab PASaRlahWzada AN CharikarQara Bagh Mullah Mohd Khel #S #S Istalif CENTERS #S #S #S #S #S Y# Kalakan %[ Capital Yakawlang #S KAPISA #S #S Shakar Dara Mir Bacha Kot #S Y# Province Sor ubi Par k- e Jamhuriat Tara Khel BAMYAN #S #S Kabul#S #S Lal o Sar Jangal Zar Kharid M District Tajikha Deh Qazi Hussain Khel Y# #S #S Kota-e Ashro %[ Central Region #S #S #S KABUL #S ROADS Khord Kabul Panjab Khan-e Ezat Behsud Y# #S #S Chaghcharan #S Maidan Shar #S All weather Primary #S Ragha Qala- e Naim WARDAK #S Waras Miran Muhammad Agha All weather Secondary #S #S #S Azro LOGAR #S Track East Chake-e Wnar dtark al RegiKolangar GHOR #S #S RIVERS Khoshi Sayyidabad Bar aki Bar ak #S # #S Ali Khel Khadir #S Y Du Abi Main #S #S Gh #S Pul-e Alam Western Region Kalan Deh Qala- e Amr uddin
    [Show full text]
  • Kabul Municipality
    د اﻓﻐﺎﻧﺴﺘﺎن اﺳﻼﻣﯽ ﺟﻤﻬﻮری دوﻟﺖ دوﻟﺖ ﺟﻤﻬﻮری اﺳﻼﻣﯽ اﻓﻐﺎﻧﺴﺘﺎن Kabul Municipality ﺩ ﺳﻴﻤﻪ ﻳﻴﺰﻭ ﺍﺭﮔﺎﻧﻮﻧﻮ ﺧﭙﻠﻮﺍﮐﻪ ﺍﺩﺍﺭﻩ ﺍﺩﺍﺭﻩ ﻣﺴﺘﻘﻞ ﺍﺭﮔﺎﻧﻬﺎي ﻣﺤﻠﻲ Government of Islamic Republic of Afghanistan Islamic Republic of Afghanistan Independent Directorate of Local Governance THE STATE OF AFGHAN CITIES 2015 MINISTER’S FOREWORD Ministry of Urban Development Affairs Cities have great potential to improve livelihoods, drive economic growth and provide safe and affordable housing and adequate services. With continued urbanisation in Afghan cities occurring in the next few decades, there is a great opportunity to promote urban development that is sustainable, equitable and a catalyst for economic growth. The priorities of the National Unity Government of Afghanistan for the urban sector are very clear. The ‘Realizing Self-Reliance’ Framework presented at the London Conference on Afghanistan in 2014 explicitly stated cities are to be drivers of economic development. The Ministry of Urban Development Affairs (MUDA) is currently leading the drafting of an Urban National Priority Programme (U-NPP) and associated comprehensive urban development programme. Together these will lay the foundations for a sustainable urban future. However in Afghanistan, basic information for urban areas does not exist, is outdated, or not shared. As a result, MUDA has been challenged to pro-actively guide the growth of Afghanistan’s cities and harness urbanisation as a driver of development. This State of Afghan Cities 2014/15 report and associated dataset is already providing essential inputs to these ongoing processes. It will ensure the outcomes are pragmatic and reflect the ground realities across the country. I sincerely thank all programme partners, the Government of Australia, and UN-Habitat for supporting MUDA to implement this programme.
    [Show full text]
  • Update on Firing Ranges (Frs), June 2021 Firing Ranges (Frs) Background
    State Ministry for Disaster Management and Humanitarian Affairs Directorate of Mine Action Coordination (DMAC) Mine Action Programme of Afghanistan (MAPA) Update On Firing Ranges (FRs), June 2021 Firing Ranges (FRs) Background Total # # of FRs # of FRs # of FRs # of FRs # of FRs Countries Remarks of FRs Surveyed Completed Cancelled Released Remaining United 85 85 62 0 62 23 UK also have contribution in some State (US) US FRs in Helmand Province German 6 3 2 0 2 4 Fortunately Germany also contracted its one FR in Balkh. Status of 3 FRs is not clear yet. New 5 5 0 1 1 4 Four FRs is ongoing and will be Zealand completed by November 2021 (NZ) Different 16 16 2 2 4 12 Two FRs cleared and two were Countries cancelled Grand 112 109 66 3 69 43 Total Firing Ranges (FRs) Geographical Locations & Status Map Graphical Representation – FRs Status 1,400 1,235 1,200 1,000 800 679.5 600 540 400 200 15.6 - Released Worked on Open Total Achievements (LR and PDIA) § 69 FRs , covering 540 sq. km area released. § Over 184,000 items of EO destroyed § Post Demining Impact Assessment (PDIA) conducted on 21 released FRs. After FR clearance the land is used for agriculture Released/Closed FRs Location Map 69 FRs Released/Closed- 540 Sq Km FRs Remaining Contamination Location Map 39 FRs Open - 679.5 Sq Km 4 FRs Worked on – 15.6 Sq Km Remaining Open FRs-Details Region Province District Village Contaminated By Status Hazard ID Hazard Name Longitude Latitude Hazard Area FR Belongs To Remarks Central Kapisa Tagab Tagab ANSF/NATO/ISAF Open Hz-ID-22430 AF/0205/00827/FR0001B
    [Show full text]
  • UNITED NATIONS General Assembly Security Council
    UNITED NATIONS A S General Assembly Distr. Security Council GENERAL A/52/358 S/1997/719 17 September 1997 ORIGINAL: ENGLISH GENERAL ASSEMBLY SECURITY COUNCIL Fifty-second session Fifty-second year Agenda item 43 THE SITUATION IN AFGHANISTAN AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR INTERNATIONAL PEACE AND SECURITY Report of the Secretary-General I. INTRODUCTION 1. The present report is submitted pursuant to paragraph 19 of General Assembly resolution 51/195 B of 17 December 1996, in which the Assembly requested the Secretary-General to report to it every three months during its fifty-first session on the progress of the United Nations Special Mission to Afghanistan (UNSMA). The report, which covers the third three-month period following the submission on 16 June 1997 of the second progress report (A/51/929-S/1997/482), is also submitted in response to the request of the Security Council for regular information on the main developments in Afghanistan. II. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN AFGHANISTAN Military situation 2. The military confrontation between the Taliban and the Northern Alliance continued on all fronts during the reporting period, with the front lines relatively static until 20 July when Commander Ahmad Shah Massoud of the Northern Alliance launched a major attack and captured Charikar and Bagram airbase north of Kabul. This offensive continued until Massoud's forces reached to within 20 to 25 kilometres north of Kabul. The city came within range of rocket and artillery attacks. Taliban counter-offensives and additional military thrusts by Massoud's forces resulted in little change on the ground. Both sides used tanks, heavy artillery, rockets and aerial bombardment during these assaults, with total casualties numbering between 500 and 1,000 fighters.
    [Show full text]
  • Länderinformationen Afghanistan Country
    Staatendokumentation Country of Origin Information Afghanistan Country Report Security Situation (EN) from the COI-CMS Country of Origin Information – Content Management System Compiled on: 17.12.2020, version 3 This project was co-financed by the Asylum, Migration and Integration Fund Disclaimer This product of the Country of Origin Information Department of the Federal Office for Immigration and Asylum was prepared in conformity with the standards adopted by the Advisory Council of the COI Department and the methodology developed by the COI Department. A Country of Origin Information - Content Management System (COI-CMS) entry is a COI product drawn up in conformity with COI standards to satisfy the requirements of immigration and asylum procedures (regional directorates, initial reception centres, Federal Administrative Court) based on research of existing, credible and primarily publicly accessible information. The content of the COI-CMS provides a general view of the situation with respect to relevant facts in countries of origin or in EU Member States, independent of any given individual case. The content of the COI-CMS includes working translations of foreign-language sources. The content of the COI-CMS is intended for use by the target audience in the institutions tasked with asylum and immigration matters. Section 5, para 5, last sentence of the Act on the Federal Office for Immigration and Asylum (BFA-G) applies to them, i.e. it is as such not part of the country of origin information accessible to the general public. However, it becomes accessible to the party in question by being used in proceedings (party’s right to be heard, use in the decision letter) and to the general public by being used in the decision.
    [Show full text]
  • Central Region CP 2012.Pdf (English)
    Central Region Contingency Plan Humanitarian Regional Team Multi-Hazard Contingency Plan Central Region (Kabul, Kapisa, Logar, Wardak, Panjshir and Parwan Provinces) Period Covered March – December 2012 Last updated 19 Mar 2012 Central Region Contingency Plan Central Region Contingency Plan Table of Contents 1 Introduction .............................................................................................. 4 1.1 Regional Context by Hazards .................................................................... 4 1.1.1 Hazards and Risk Analysis .................................................................. 6 1.1.2 Cross-cutting Risks ........................................................................... 7 2 Coordination Arrangements ............................................................................ 8 2.1 National / Local Authorities’ responsibilities ................................................. 8 2.1.1 Disaster occurrence ......................................................................... 8 2.1.2 Operational procedures ..................................................................... 8 2.2 Humanitarian community: UN AFPs, INGOs and NNGOs ..................................... 9 2.2.1 The cluster approach ........................................................................ 9 2.3 Overview of Emergency Preparedness and Response Partners .... Error! Bookmark not defined. 2.4 Response Matrix................................................................................... 10 ANNEXES (see separate
    [Show full text]